Hello all,
OK, this may not be as bad as replacing the heater levers, but I think it qualifies me as a glutton for punishment.
Since I was not willing to pay the absurd amounts for new sun visors, and after searching the Tech Manual, this Forum and online for solutions, I took the plunge and rebuilt my sun visors. Yes, I have too much time on my hands. But I also enjoy a challenge.
I'm surprised and happy with the results, since I just jumped into the project and figured it out along the way. Total spend was less than $50 for materials, for both visors. Note that, as you'll see, the finish quality meets my requirements for my high-quality driver, but probably won't cut it for a pristine show car.
The first photo shows what the driver side ('71 LHD 280SL) sun visor originally looked like. You know, the saggy, dilapidated foam collapsing from the inside.
The goal was to rebuild it to maintain originality (unique Pagoda shape, no mirror on the passenger side, light grey color), but also improve the durability of the result using better internal materials. The method I used was to slice open the “blind” edge of the visor (facing the windshield) as little as possible, pull out the guts, rebuild the interior, re-insert the new interior, and then re-seal the cut edge. Since one of the visors was “sunburned” on one side (!) I decided to spray them with a marine vinyl paint/coating. While I was at it, I re-chromed the pivot bar. The result from a passenger (and, indeed, driver) perspective is a new visor.
I started by cutting the blind side at the pivot point where the blind edge seam meets the chrome piece. (see photo) This leaves the seam on the other side of the lever untouched, from there all the way around the visor, to the opposite side of the blind seam. End the cut mid-way through the curve to the straight end of the visor. This allowed me to cut the minimum amount of seam, then “hook” the finished interior under the characteristic visor “bump,” and rotate/slide the rest of the interior package into the cover.
When the slice was complete, I removed the interior parts.